When knowledge hurts: humans are willing to receive pain for obtaining non-instrumental information

Author:

Bode Stefan1ORCID,Sun Xiaoyu1,Jiwa Matthew1,Cooper Patrick S.12,Chong Trevor T.-J.234,Egorova-Brumley Natalia1

Affiliation:

1. Melbourne School of Psychological Sciences, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne 3010, Australia

2. Turner Institute for Brain and Mental Health, Monash University, Clayton 3080, Australia

3. Department of Neurology, Alfred Health, Melbourne 3004, Australia

4. Department of Clinical Neurosciences, St Vincent's Hospital, Melbourne 3065, Australia

Abstract

Humans and other animals value information that reduces uncertainty or leads to pleasurable anticipation, even if it cannot be used to gain tangible rewards or change outcomes. In exchange, they are willing to incur significant costs, sacrifice rewards or invest effort. We investigated whether human participants were also willing to endure pain—a highly salient and aversive cost—to obtain such information. Forty participants performed a computer-based task. On each trial, they observed a coin flip, with each side associated with different monetary rewards of varying magnitude. Participants could choose to endure a painful stimulus (low, moderate or high pain) to learn the outcome of the coin flip immediately. Importantly, regardless of their choice, winnings were always earned, rendering this information non-instrumental. Results showed that agents were willing to endure pain in exchange for information, with a lower likelihood of doing so as pain levels increased. Both higher average rewards and a larger variance between the two possible rewards independently increased the willingness to accept pain. Our results show that the intrinsic value of escaping uncertainty through non-instrumental information is sufficient to offset pain experiences, suggesting a shared mechanism through which these can be directly compared.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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